Crops You BETTER Start in February. Cold Climate Edition
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- Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
- Looking to get a head start on your garden this year? In this video, we’ll explore the best garden seeds to start in February if you live in a cold climate. From hardy vegetables to early spring flowers, we’ll cover which seeds you can start indoors to get a jump on the growing season. Whether you’re planning a vegetable garden or adding some color to your landscape, these tips will help ensure a successful garden, even in the colder months. Make the most of winter with these February planting suggestions!
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Ashley has had a passion for plants since she was a small child. In the long summers as a child, she would garden alongside her grandmother and it was then that she realized her love for greenery. With years of great studying, Ashley had begun her post-secondary education at the University of Saskatchewan.
At first, her second love, animals, was the career path she chose but while doing her undergrad she realized that her education would take her elsewhere. And with that, four years later she graduated from the University of Saskatchewan with a bachelor’s degree in science and a major in Soil Science.
Some of Ashley’s interests are RUclips, in which she posts informative videos about plants and gardening. The focus of Ashley’s RUclips channel is to bring science to gardening in a way that is informative but also helpful to others learning to garden. She also talks about the importance of having your own garden and the joys of gardening indoors. Ashley continues to study plants in her free time and hopes to expand her RUclips channel as well as her reach to up-and-coming gardeners.
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This description or comments section may contain links to affiliate websites. I receive a commission for any purchases made by you on the affiliate website using such a link. This includes the gardening in Canada website. You should assume all links both on the gardening in Canada RUclips, Blog, and all other social media are affiliates and I will receive compensation.
GIC Crew what are the February seeds you start?
These my favourite 50 seeds bit.ly/48gKaaZ
I start religiously every year! If you grab anything from here is also helps the channel!
Sugar snap peas, carrots, spinach, lettuce (sometimes). Maybe strawberries and onions this year. Strawberries may not be available here in February.
My greenhouse is heated only by the sun. Three sunny days in January here in Michigan on average, and 5 days in December and February. So warm weather crops are out.
Arugula, collards, and kale are not edible, so no reason to put them in the garden. Decorative only. Pretty sure my wild rabbits would not touch them.
@@mickbadgero5457
If your arugula gets inedible, it's getting too much sun. I usually grow it in my basement most of the year because my bearded dragons love it, but just grow lights have plenty of light to grow it and the hotter and brighter its conditions, the spicier and more bitter it is. Dragon tongue gets so spicy that not even my dragons will eat it. Collards I also grow for them and it does best in part-shade. I don't prefer the texture. I'd rather eat pak choi or even mammoth red cabbage. I grew mammoth red and Dutch green cabbages in my basement last year for salad greens and they were DELICIOUS. Just did it cut and come again like a lettuce, then transplanted them outside when it warmed up and harvested good medium sized heads off them. I think they were small because of how long they were in a small pot in the basement getting hacked. Lol.
Lisianthus, petunias, eucalyptus, geraniums that's all. I then winter sowing this month. I have had great success with winter sowing why use space now.
@@mickbadgero5457we eat arugula and collards my kids like kale
Yes! to the repeats. Yes! to the warnings. I NEED repeats and warnings. Thank god someone is keeping track of the seed starting season.
Literally me on the daily 😂
I haven't even started planting and I'm already overwhelmed😂
HAHAHAJAJAJA same here 😂
😂😂😂
I just started gardening two years ago and so far EVERY Feb/Mar I get this insatiable feeling, mentioned 0:0:58. 😅
I started my pepper plants today! JOY JOY JOY JOY...I have two grow tents and a ton of lights in a room in my house dedicated to my seedlings. Cheers from Ottawa🍁
Woohoo!!!
Longest January ever. This was soooooo needed.
LOL everyone is saying that
One of my neighbours put mint in her raised bed years ago. It breached the bed, and now her grass is mint. It choked out the freaking Bermuda grass!
It breached the bed 🤣🤣 I love it. Like an military force
Oh yeah, the mint family is AGGRESSIVE lol. Our mint cross pollinated and became super aggressive in my bins. I'm on her everyday during the summer making sure her runners don't take root outside of it.
This is what started my fascination of gardening. I read somewhere that mint in the grass smells great . So true! It smells great when mowed.
Over the years, the grass is gone.
I have mint. , parsley and campanula.
My yard is under snow, yet still green in February! 😊
I'm a landscaper and one client has a bunch of Pepermint that spread into her lawn...I absolutely LOVE mowing her property...smells so amazing! 😊And because it gets cut short...it doesn't look bad. She planted it there on purpose and I love it! ❤️
@@GardeningInCanadamy dog is always breaching the bed 😡
Mother nature over here throwing out last frost dates like it's confetti lol.
I had to choke a laugh back when you talked about redheads because my littlest redhead had just crawled onto my lap to settle down and my other redhead is asleep in the next room XD
I went through the comments and I think if everyone would take the value out of this video and leave the rest in your head would be perfect. She is doing great. Be positive.❤
Sask Market gardener here 😊 love this channel. I agree onions and leeks in Feb is a great plan. BUT! Last season my dog managed to lay on my onion trays a month in. So I started some onions late March. And I still had grapefruit sized onions this year. Rich loose soil helps. Don’t lose hope!! 😅😅
Hi Ashley! I'm in Michigan and really enjoying your videos. I can't transplant warm season veg until nearly June, so I appreciate your channel! I'm glad you re-affirmed starting onions about now because I am over starting seeds early. I appreciate what you said about larger tomatoes and peppers not transplanting as well. Last year I waited until mid-April to start those guys and I will be repeating that this year! I don't like dealing with 3-foot tomatoes in my house. 6-8 inches will satisfy me :D
Thank you!
I wish I had a problem with mint, or spearmint, or peppermint. I've planted it for years and have none to show for it. Seems every deer, squirrel, and ground squirrel, oh, and skunk love to eat it in my yard.
My mother grew and it took over her yard -- loved mowing with the smell of mint wafting through the air and house along with new cut cut grass.
This video is so helpful, I love it. I tried wintersowing today with my flowers, herbs, and perennials in milk jugs and have a few spinach containers with violas, dahlia mixes, and various cool crops that has germination already. I'm so excited!
I needed your perspective on this! Very happy to be tucking in to this rn
10:56 my favorite greens. Tatsoi, bok choy, pok choy... Om nom nom.
💜🎶Good day ..Yes , I've have seeds started .. and Columbine seeds in the fridge ! 💜🎶🇨🇦
I start my micro dwarf tomatoes in feb. Because i can put them in their forever pots in the greenhouse. And get tomatoes in april/may.
Let's Grow!
I definitely learned the hard way not to plant too early! Having 40+ large pots of plants several feet tall, which you need to place outside during the day (otherwise not enough sun) and then bring back inside before the cold temps hit? It gets old pretty quick haha! Not to mention the bf constantly complaining "how much longer will the kitchen be a jungle??".
For future videos, can you please mention specifically whether or not your recommendations are for starting indoors with/without a heating mat, direct sowing in a covered grow box, or wintersowing?
Absolutely!
Saw you on page 13 of the West Coast Seeds catalogue! woot woot
I made the mistake of seed starting to early with kale last Feb (mid Atlantic) most didn’t make it or were stunted due to wet Cold weather and slugs. I direct sewed in March and got strong resilient plants all summer. They were twice the size of my seedlings started indoors earlier. Good lesson I won’t forget.
So this video doesn't apply to me and I wouldn't normally comment on someone 's appearance cause it ain't my business but... I just had to tell you that your hair is looking amazing!
This video doesn't apply to me either. Not until tomorrow.
Aw, thanks! I appreciate it!
Yarrow is my favorite!!
When I buy celery from the supermarket I cut of the root and stick the root in a glass & put it on the windowsill. Starts growing amazingly fast
Celery does very well in 6 gallon grow bags. About 5 plants per bag. Its a very thirsty plant, so if you can swing it, have some irrigation line from a reservoir. Can cut and come again or harvest from outside stalks . I grew mine in a cattle panel hoop house. Slugs didnt find them as they didn't like crawling up the fabric of the bags. To blanch them put a cardboard tube going halfway up the stalks leaving the leaves exposed. Tango, Utah did ok.
A great celery variety in zone 4 - high elevation in the Rockies (realize some might be a full zone colder in Canada) is from High Mountain and is called Tango. We were finally able to grow it successfully. It was really easy, handled light frosts and had a nice flavor. Abundant! Hope this helps someone.
Also in the Rockies, Amsterdam celery grew well despite our cool summers at high elevation.
We're just starting a cold snap right now- we're even going to have negarive 10C weather over the next few nights- once that is over I will get on some of my seeds
Celery variety I use in manitoba, zone 3, is Tango and Utah. I typically start mine only in mid march to transplant for late may or early june. Most of my plants are started in March with the exception of onions, leeks and artichokes, hot/sweet peppers in late February. My bell peppers do best starting early/mid March. Last year i started them in february by seed and they got big and they started fruiting 2 weeks before I could transplant them. Needless to say, they didn't do as well afterwards as my previous years.
Thank you for all your videos. Not too many Garden in zone 3 and 4. Our last frost date is often June.
Ours too. We plant 95% or our garden around the second week of June 🫤
Oh Boy~!! You've been working on your delivery. It's much more to the point and less meandering. You were wandering a bit between 8 and 10 but really, great job~!!
It is funny that it is still Jan 31 here in MI. I did double-check, but I will keep listening anyway
Australia time?
Me, too!
Still January in Wisconsin too, for a few more hours! 😊😂
The computer said the video is a day old. I had to check the date today! 😂. Fun stuff.
I am way behind, but all I would plant is spinach and kale after I do the chores - gardening chores - I am behind on. ❤
I started all my alliums indoors last week and they’re already peaking through the soil. Also sowed rosemary, thyme, salvia and celeriac. Only the rosemary hasn’t germinated yet. I also experimented with direct sowing delphinium and hollyhocks earlier this week, while the weather was warm and the snow had melted along fences with south sun exposure. Shovelled snow on top. We’ll see how it goes come May/June. Supposed to get close to minus 30 the next few days! From zone 3 Alberta.
I'm in 3b. I'll be starting onions and eucalyptus next week. Everything else is started mid March- mid April.
My rabbits, absolutely love Yarrow.
I love love love these videos. I always see videos like “you’d be nuts not to start these plants” and it’s always like, Zone 8 stuff, and totally useless to me. lol
❤️❤️🇨🇦
I am zone 8 by temperature but less so by day length, so its tricky to interpret. I really like when growers reference where they're from, repeatedly! I dont know how many years it took for me to remember Epic Gardening was in California... Of course he can harvest peppers in december and plant tomatoes outside in february. Sickening. Lol.
But if the Canadians can start, I better get on it before its too late!
For our tomatoes and peppers as they get bigger and the weather gets nicer, I have them in a clear tot and take them outside for a bit. We do this for like 2 to 3 weeks before we can plant.. like acclimatizing them.
Ok I totally agree with you on NOT doing tomatoes with one very particular exception. The last two years I have started a small microdwarf tomato in mid February (zone 6-inland Pacific Northwest if anyone wants to know). We typically get several warm days with good light for 6 or so hours during the day BUT I am home and I can move it in and outside and around the yard for the best sunlight possible and I COMMIT to that process until at least mid-May just keeping a very close eye on the weather and supplementing with a fan and indoor lighting as needed when the weather doesn’t cooperate.
Is it worth it? Probably not for everyone but I do so love harvesting some cherry tomatoes as early as possible. I also start at least one micro dwarf variety every few weeks and do the same process in reverse. I’ve harvested tomatoes from these plants S late into the fall as mid-November.
Just an FYI, not sure if you meant to, but the second pic of butterfly with the black swallowtail, it's actually on lantana, not milkweed. I think the milkweed you may be talking about is the swamp milkweed which has modest flowers that kinda look like yarrow, but not as many. There's also the other kind of milkweed which the monarchs love, and it's got super fuzzy leaves and grows really tall, bulks out, and forms the big pods. I don't think the swamp milkweed does that but someone can correct me if I'm wrong..
None of that really matters to your planting instructions though but I started typing and just kept going lol
LOL I just use stock video 🙄. I was going moreso for butterfly footage but I can see why that is confusing.
I've started eggplant indoors for many years, and I agree that starting too early is not ideal. I've had eggplants in a two gallon pot, by the time they could go in the ground. They stall for at least 3 weeks. This year, im going to transplant when they are much smaller.
I start my tobacco in feb under lights, edit peas, garden beans and carrots outdoors also
Mmmmmmm I'm gonna do it.
Tomatoes here I come!!! 😅
Well. In late February I will. Lol!
That's the spirit! May the GIC force be with you
😂
lol tomatoes going to be started in middle of feb coming up ❤we will need our gardens more then ever now with the cost of everything going up !!!
Yesterday was sunny and relatively warm so I just threw old seeds everywhere. The next 5ish days is sub -15. I just wanted to experiment. See if anything is different this year and seeds are cheap.
Are you doing any sweet potatoes?
been taking ur advice! we finally have 10 hrs of Sunlight outside! time to grow seeds!
Wonderful!
I started tomatoes a month ago here in zone 5. WHYYYY? Because I'm growing a bunch of Orange Hat Tomatoes to sell to people in town. Lol. They only get like 6-9 inches tall and are very prolific. Supposedly, they produce well in a sunny window.
I never cared for the Orange Hat found it was bland... I got quite a few different varieties started this year to try... been staggering based on heat mat availability... I am in 5b zone in Nova Scotia I usually have a few extra plants started as well for backups or to sell/giveaway as well
LOL I have been growing onions from Dec. 24, 2024, chili peppers 3 weeks ago, and I have a myriad of geranium cuttings and coleuses from last year. Hello from Toronto
I'm in awe of your dedication! 😊
I tossed my geraniums in with my cannas dry. I'll see if they revive or not. Figured it was worth a shot.
I pulled my geranium in from the balcony and put in my unseated bedroom. It isn’t dead yet. I will see if I can save cuttings.
I'll be using the red head technique this winter/ spring for my peppers. Thanks!
Pepper plants and toppings. When the deer decided to top all my pepper plants, i only had one habanero i could save. It did die trying to over winter it BTW. In my whole life I have never seen a plant that had so many flowers on it when i had to bring it in. The flowers did fall off.. I just wish I could have saved it.
Haha agreed on the tomato discouragement for February. Did that once with dozens of plants and finding space for them was a nightmare, even with a big room in the basement! I just didn't have enough grow lights at the right height to make it work, cuz some were like 2-3 feet tall! Lol
I'm so glad I'm not the only one 😂
Me too!😂
@@GardeningInCanada planted peppers and tomatoes today!
But
they go out to the greenhouse beginning of April.
Calgary
Your videos mke me happy
I love yarrow in my lawn! Mow once a month so it doesn't become woody, but the blooms make for a beautiful feathery lawn
I love that idea!
I was so surprised to hear you say not to start Tomatoes now. When do you start them?
I keep on saying as soon as this storm passes, and then another rolls through... But temps are good now lol
I love my butterfly weed (milkweed) plants, they just pop up all over the place and make big clusters of flowers that the bees and butterflies absolutely love. But as is seen in the shots you used of it, they attract large amounts of yellow aphids. I'm not sure if it's a trap crop situation or if they also become a problem for other plants but I sure hate seeing so many aphids in the garden like that.
Love your videos recommend you to my gardening friends as we are in MB. Thanks for repeats my brain need them.
Most of my indoor space got taken up by a plethora of cold hardy citrus.
Citrandarins mostly, a couple doaen Citrange. Rootstock varieties generaly.
I also seeded a big bunch of quats; Fukushu, Nagami, Calamondin, Mandarinquats.
Zone 6b/7a ~Asheville area, NC. I got that quat.
I appreciate the repetition! Allows us to plan for the future as well considering you give relatively early times!
I know, I try to keep it as practical as possible
My room has become a jungle of mini perennials, more varieties of milkweed to boost my established swamp variety. I saw monarch on it every day it was in bloom but never saw eggs/caterpillar etc. Hoping varieties and an earlier start will let me catch the cycle this year.
Oh! I am going to starting these this month! Any tips? I’ve heard they are difficult….?
That sounds amazing! I love your dedication.
I just viewed a video about milkweed seed/ floss is a great old fashioned way to get fiber for a sleeping bag!
Thresh and separate seeds to go back in the yard, but the fibers can be sewn into old sheets to become loft in the blanket!
@@tanyakilbane7636Cool! I heard that thistle down was used in the war for the same purpose.
I do winter sowing in salad clam shells buried under the snow for milkweeds. Have 7 species in my garden.
To encourage egg-laying, top 1/3 of milkweed plants in early June so there is tender foliage to attract females to lay eggs once attracted to the other 2/3s in flower.
Caterpillars are not excited about feeding on large tougher leaves.
Thanks from France. Can't wait to get dirt under my nails. Looking great by the way.
Have fun!
I wish more people understood transplant shock. What I mean is, I have heard all my life about how bad it is. Personally I have never witnessed anything aside from a pause. The worst I have seen is plants looking the same for 3 or 4 weeks then explode with growth. Not looking at all sick, just hanging out. Still worried me.
🇨🇦only 55 growing days here. I have lovage that is a delicious celery alternative that survives with out any help at all-45°C. It came back with babies after that! It’s crazy lol
Wow that's amazing! Lovage is a great herb.
Ohhh I have seeds for that this I'm excited
😮 ❤
I must try to find some lovage seeds..
@@marlenemcmillan8891 I think I bought mine from West Coast Seeds
I have always read to direct sew onions as they don't transplant well. Please share how you do this
I LOVE bok choy in soup. Makes it less stringy. Any tips on how to keep it from being absolutely decimated by flea beetles?
Plant early. Literally the moment you can get in the ground workable
@ transplants I assume?
@12;17 - Redheads! Ha!!Love it!!! There's 3 of us in my house, so I won't be buying heat mats... we'll just breathe on them 😂
Ahaha oh man… I want to sit at your kitchen table
@GardeningInCanada My daughters and I would welcome you anytime. We're in the balmy 6-zone near Toronto. Our family dinners are awesome! I love your channel Ashley. You're one smart lady!!
@@treesjones to funny about red hair people. My brother is one. Thank you.
@Charles-bj7qu Fun Fact! Red heads don't need sun to create Vitamin D. Odd but true
Hi there! I started a roma tomatoe plant last January because I was bored.
Put the ugly mess out in mid-June Got about 50ish really nice tomatoes.
But I think roma's are easier to keep alive. IDK (N.S.)
I'm itching to start my sugar babies. They are my favorite plant.
I started my artichokes in December. They are growing in my unheated glass porch. Ohio.
this is *perfect* my ma and i were JUST talking about which seeds we should start soon!!
completely unrelated: my kitten is ENAMOURED by your voice~ she held my phone in place so she could watch you, and she kept sniffing the screen trying to figure you out lol!
❤
If people want to start seeds, winter sowing is an awesome option. Hands dirty, not using indoor space. Perennials , herbs, and flowers that seeds that need stratification. I know its difficult waiting but it's worth not starting too soon
i started my artichoke in january last year.. i never got blooms ... montreal canada... the plants looker great full full sun
.... but lot of f... aphids... was almost a trap crop... trying again this year
Remember when people post negative comments, most of the world is jealous of Redheads! We are behind you, keep up the great work and videos.
I bought a notebook recently with a red-headed mermaid on the front. She is very beautiful in her octopus’s garden and I thought of you, Ashley.
I start my Utah and Pink Plume celery in Jan with my onions, zone 5a. The more robust the plant is in April the better with the celery. This year I will try the seed snail when bumping up to see if there is much difference.
Hope you are well !!!!!
The best Chanel ❤ thank u for sharing ❤
loved your comment on if your lights are on ...giver shit. Made me chuckle. Thanks
Hello quick container gardening question. If I start my peppers now and I'm esntally potting up till it's warm out side would that still effect the way the plant produces peppers?? I have a balcony that I use to grow on.
Is this to plant in a tent or covered area? I'm a brand new gardener, do i start these inside? Like the asparagus for example? And is this from seeds?
Hello from France! Looking forward to spring! 🌱 🌼 🌺
Hello there!
Agreed on the milkweed ugliness, at least for common milkweed, and it doesn't help that one spreads like the dickens . Other _Asclepias_ species can be more comely, like butterfly weed and whorled milkweed. I'm focusing butterfly weed and swamp milkweed this year, and I may have a hookup on some purple milkweed this spring, too!
I took my overwintered peppers out of dormancy and they are already getting big! Should I cut them back?
You definitely could!!
Feb. 6 here in N.C. 🇺🇸
Thank you!! My notes on Milkweed: they need 4-6 weeks cold stratification for a good germination rate (Dec-Jan, then sow in Feb-March). It will only produce flowers during its second year. And it is the host plant for the Monarch Butterfly. It's the only food for their caterpillars, so there is a lot of love for its conservation purposes ❤
I had monarch caterpillars eating my dill plants. Is that normal? I always heard they only eat milkweed plants.
How can I direct sow arugula is the soil is still completely covered with snow…
Maybe I’ll have to wait until later February or March.
Thank you.
I will edit, in a second.
You know so much, I thank you so much. The information is so great. It is interesting that I like the way you are talking about annuals and perennials.
We should plant more perennials.
Just my opinion.
Colors for All seasons.
Or food.
I’m a big fan of perennials too!
I garden on a desert balcony (it is totally cover, so no rain touches it). I have found it takes a special perennial to survive out there. 😣
@@leahnichol6665 can you see that it's your opportunity to see what you can do with that space ..
I'm trying to figure out the number of pots and weather.p
@@Charles-bj7qu Yes. I am laying put pots this year and only planting what will fit into the pots. There is no tap out there, so come summer and temperatures going above 100F, it becomes a whole lot of water! I am enjoying myself so much, I am sure it will be fun. 🤩
Canadian tire and the nurseries sell all those herbs seedlings, so unless you have a very rare herb you want, don’t waste your time starting them now.
Red Stalk celery is fabulous
Oooo never heard of this
Oh going to start my Sugar babies watermelons now as take awhile to grow them , had a great crop last year had 8 of them so sweet
Not even technically February yet😅. My adhd brain hurts 🙃 😂 at least we both were able to spell the month correct. thanks Ashley
😂
Wait start onion seeds have to go straight in the ground in February, or seed indoor February. My last frost date April 15. I started a tray a month ago nothing came up, started a tray 2 weeks ago, they are. But it was a have tray, so I wanted more, I guess my question is at this point if I want to sow more onion seed this season, right now, do I sow indoor or outside? Sorry so long thx Tim
Sorry start now plant out later. Literally May or June pending soil temps
What is the trick for early spring onions? I had fall onions in october last year! I presprouted them and transplanted the plugs early spring, but they just didnt grow they stagnated
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐👍
Calabaza squash
u should make a video on the UV index ranges effect on Plants outdoors! that would be fun to research on!
Totally off topic but could you please do a video on plants bred to produce sterile seeds.
Context: I really want supertunias and wanted to start growing them now (weeks ago in January), but they only sell the established plant at garden centers (proven winners) and no seeds anywhere. The only seeds that come up are the wave petunia series.
Questions:
Whats the overall purpose of creating sterile plants? (I can see the benefits if the plant is invasive but has nice blooms)
Overall I just wanted to either start the seeds or save seed from the starts but I can’t do either 😢
❤ you like I do flowers
Can someone tell me where in Canada this young lady is from? Gardening in British Columbia is extremely different than gardening in, let’s say, Alberta… and sadly, I don’t live in B.C.😂
So where do I get one of these redheads? ;)
The orphanage or your local psych hospital usually
Oh dear! :o LOL
😂😂😂😂
1300 min mark starting strawberries- am I understanding to start them inside or direct sow?
❤
Has anybody started brassicas in Feb. and put them under lights during day but in really cool temp at night. I was thinking garage at night. Dark and plus 10 Celsius?
If you have really good light and a cooler space you should be okay
"go ahead, giver shit" - just in case anyone wasn't totally sure they were watching Canadian content lol. Just a callout on Milkweed. I actually raise Monarchs here in SW Ontario and have large patches of milkweed. I grow more each year. The taproot is sensitive and can go into shock if they grow too long without planting out - for that reason I suggest people wait. Also the seeds prefer to be cold stratified (for native varieties) so right now mine are in the fridge in damp paper towel waiting for March and then I will get them started.
I've grown Tango celery exactly once 😂 and it was kinda by accident.. wasn't where I planted it.. unless I transplanted it from elsewhere I don't even remember 😂😂
But yeah, I wouldn't recommend it just because of my otherwise large number of failures lol
That’s the other one!!!!
I bet if you didn't mention the repeats you'd get a bunch of questions on the comments asking if it's a good time to plant them anyway 😂.
lol that’s probably true